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make their views "prevail", apart from the reasonableness and feasibility of those views, except in the limited sense of "prevailing" at the meetings of the Committee, which is of course wholly immaterial. Nor could their being in a minority prevent their views "prevailing", if these should prove to be reasonable and practicable. For a like reason the Chief Justice is in

my opinion similarly

on

the Committee

similarly

in error in supposing... that he would...

ad... 430

37.

supposing...

Chairman... an... be deprived of all real influence on the Committee if it were constituted in a certain

manner.

6.

The matter in hand, however, is practically but little advanced when it has been shown that Mr. Whitehead's opinion is based on faulty premises, for that is not calculated to at all affect his attitude and action. The question...

1

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